Megan Reed, Danni McConnell, Ashley Morales

Three of the 2017 California Retired Teacher Association-Santa Barbara Fellowship awardees (l-r): Megan Reed, Danni McConnell, Ashley Morales (not pictured: Gabriel Matthews and Evelín Servín)

The California Retired Teachers Association (CalRTA) awarded scholarships to five outstanding graduate students from UC Santa Barbara’s Gevirtz School. Ashley Morales, Megan Reed and Evelín Servín are the recipients of the Laura E. Settle Scholarship. All three are Multiple Subject Teacher credential candidates. Gabriel Matthews and Danni McConnell are the recipients of the Anne & Harry Scales Scholarship. Both are Single Subject Teacher credential candidates, Matthews in Science and McConnell in History/Social Science. All five students are Masters Degree candidates in the Teacher Education Program at the Gevirtz School. The students were presented their awards at a dinner held by the California Retired Teachers Association in Santa Barbara on May 15, 2017.

Anne Scales, after whom the Single Subject Teacher credential candidate scholarship is named, was a counselor at Santa Barbara High School for 32 years prior to her retirement. Scales believes that it is important for a teacher to have an enthusiasm for life and teachers should bring a broad base of interests and experiences into the classroom. In an interview she commented that teachers “should not only teach, but also be interested in helping young people.” Recipients of the Laura E. Settle Scholarships must not only have outstanding academic records but also a record of exemplary character and citizenship.

UCSB’s Teacher Education Program offers the Multiple-Subject, the Single-Subject (in 6 content areas), the Level I Education Specialist Moderate/Severe Teaching Credential, and an M.Ed. in Teaching. The programs are run as a cohort, with the elementary and secondary cohorts no larger than 50 students each, and the special education cohort no larger than 15. Candidates are placed in partner K-12 schools throughout the 9-month academic year, student teaching in the morning and attending university classes in the afternoon/evening. The Teacher Education Program is unique in that many of its faculty both supervise candidates in the field and teach university courses. The result is a cohesive, well-articulated program of study that takes candidates through each developmental phase of learning to teach.